Regarding your question about cheese - the answer I gave in my previous response was the short answer. To expand on that, there are some "artificial" cheeses that some of us can eat. In the recipe room, for example, Dee mentions a website that sells "allergen-free" cheese, (among other products). It is here:
http://www.allergyfreefoods.com/order-products.asp
However, their products contain corn derivatives, (especially, relatively large amounts of corn starch, and a couple of smaller items that may be derived from corn). Therefore, whether or not they would adversely affect you, depends on whether or not you are corn intolerant.
Most of the commercial "cheese substitutes" that are available are based on soy, and soy is a pretty common allergen, so they're not a practical option for many/most of us.
If you want to try your hand at making your own "cheese substitute", here are some recipes that I got from the celiac forum noted below, that describe how to make Cashew Cheese. Apparently, the first recipe is from the chefs at Five Loaves Deli & Bakery, (which is considered by many to be Seattle's finest vegetarian restaurant), and they appear in a book titled Best Gourmet Recipes, by Neva Brackett. Note that all but the last recipe include nutritional yeast flakes, (in case that's a problem).
http://www.glutenfreeforum.com/index.ph ... opic=21880Sliceable Cashew Cheese From Five Loaves Deli & Bakery by Neva Brackett
2 cups cashew nuts
3/8 cup emes kosher gel (I'm sure regular gelatin would work)
1 ½ cups boiling water
2 Tbs. Lemon juice
2 Tbs. Yeast flakes (nutritional)
1 Tbs. Salt
1 tsp. Onion powder
½ tsp. Garlic powder
1 Cup Cold water
1. Place all ingredients in the blender except the 1 cup cold water. Turn on and blend for 1 or 2 minutes until very smooth.
Hint: Place a towel over the lid of the blender before turning on. Hot liquids tend to splash out.
2. Add 1 cup cold water, blend briefly and pour into containers of your choice to chill and slice when firm.
Hint: This recipe makes a white cheese resembling Jack cheese. If you want half of it to resemble American cheese in color, pour half of it into a 1 pint mold and blend in ¼ cup pimientos and 1 tsp. paprika to the remainder. This can be frozen, so you might want to make a double recipe and keep it handy for future use, Frozen Cashew Cheese shreds very nicely if you do it while still frozen, and makes a great topping for Pizza. To thaw, set out at room temperature for an hour. Don't try to thaw it in the microwave--it will melt and not be sliceable.
Prep time: 15 min Chill time: 4 hr or overnight.
Cashew Pimento Cheese (for pizza) From Cooking by the Book by Marcella Lynch
½ c water
½ c cashews
½ tsp. salt
2 tbs. oil
2 ½ tbs. lemon juice
1 4oz jar pimentos
½ tsp. onion salt
½ tsp. garlic salt
1 ½ tbs. nutritional yeast flakes
Whiz all ingredients together in blender until smooth. Drizzle over pizza before baking.
Melted Cheese Sauce (I use with Sliceable cheese w/o gel for mac & cheese)
From Newstart Lifestyle Cookbook by Weimar Institute
2 cups water
¼ cup clean, raw cashews
4 ounce jar pimentos
3 tbs. food yeast flakes
2 tbs. cornstarch or arrowroot
1 tbs. fresh lemon juice
1 ½ tsp. salt
½ tsp. onion flakes or powder
¼ tsp. garlic powder
Process cashews in about ½ cup of the water in a blender until very smooth. Add remaining water and other ingredients and continue blending until very smooth. Simmer in a heavy saucepan until thickened, stirring constantly (5-6 minutes). Pour over vegetables, potatoes, tortilla chips etc.
Variations: for Cheese Fondue or Cheese Spread increase cornstarch or arrowroot to 3 tablespoons.
Nacho Cheese Sauce (also from Newstart)
1 cup clean, raw cashews
1 cup hot water
2 ounce jar pimentos
1 tbs. fresh lemon juice
1 tsp. onion powder
1 tsp. salt
½ tsp. garlic powder
½ tsp. paprika
Chili powder to taste
Process cashews and hot water in a blender until very smooth. Add remaining ingredients and continue blending until very smooth. Pour into saucepan and heat over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until thickened. Serve over chips, if desired.
Here is one more completely different recipe that appears to have possibilities, (I haven't tried any of these):
I would think that any of us would be able to safely eat this last one, unless, of course, the garlic powder or onion powder is a problem.Adjust the proportions to your taste and desire for gelled-up quality (more gelatin equals a more solid, gelled consistency)
Gently heat:
Canned coconut milk (can find this in any asian grocery store)
When it is simmering, stir in:
Some plain gelatin
Some garlic powder and onion powder and Sea Salt .
Stir until the gelatin dissolves, then chill.
Tex